Spherical cylinder? do you even know what these words mean? Sphere, spherical, is something that's round like a Bowling/tennis/Basketball. Cylinder, cylindrical is somethint that looks like it'd been cut right out of a piece of pipe/tubing.
You might as well ask for a circular square.
It is possible to calculate the volume of odd geometrical shapes, but you need to be able to describe them exactlyfirst.
Volume of cylinder: base squared times length
v=l*b
Volume of a cylinder in cubic units = piradius2height
The diameter, alone, is not enough to find the volume of a cylinder. You need the height as well. > Where pi = 3.1416, and d = cylinder diameter cylinder volume = pi * (d/2)2 * length of cylinder
you listen to it
Volume of cylinder: base squared times length
v=l*b
Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height in cubic units
Find the volume of the cylinder
Volume of a cylinder in cubic units = piradius2height
The diameter, alone, is not enough to find the volume of a cylinder. You need the height as well. > Where pi = 3.1416, and d = cylinder diameter cylinder volume = pi * (d/2)2 * length of cylinder
you listen to it
Density = Mass/Volume, correct. However, with a cylinder, you have to find the volume. In order to find the volume of a cylinder use the equation PiR2 * H where "R" is the radius (Diameter/2) squared.
It depends on the way the question is asked. If you are dealing with a cubic or rectangular object, you measure the length, width, and height, and multiply them. If it is a spherical or irregularly shaped object, you could used water displacement to find its volume. If it's a liquid, you could use a graduated cylinder to measure its volume.
Volume of a cylinder = pi*(radius)2*(height) where pi = 22/7
First find the area of the cylinder's base, and multiply that by the height. For V = A x h. Volume, Area, height.
Graduated cylinder